Every time I hold a newborn baby, I’m filled with wonder — because each new life feels like a miracle.
We don’t like to talk about miracles today. Rational materialists laugh at the idea that miracles can happen. Even Christians draw a line between the “supernatural” and things we choose to accept as normal. Some of us would rather not talk about anything that science can’t explain.
But the longer I live, the more I’m forced to accept that there are plenty of truths that nobody can explain. Life and love are ordinary miracles. We might accept that they’re real, but we have no more explanation of them than we have of how Jesus might’ve turned water into wine.
Our lives are filled with ordinary miracles. In fact, the best parts of our lives are those inexplicable things that don’t have natural explanations. Those things are far more impressive than the supernatural miracles that so many people try to find.
It’s as though we’re so accustomed to these tiny miracles that we pretend we understand them.

We need loving communities so we can know, ‘You’re not alone’
In winner-take-all systems, swing voters matter only at election time
Why are you and I forced to pay for free phones for certain folks?
‘Just do exactly what we say to do; it’s for your own good, you know’
My pride and insecurity make it difficult for me to live in humility
My utopia’s different from your utopia — and that’s just fine
They’re just images of past love, but I can’t make them go away
500 years after Luther’s 95 theses, there’s still not much to celebrate